Column of loops in a knitted fabric.
A raised mark on the skin (as produced by the blow of a whip); characteristic of many allergic reactions.
Thick plank forming a ridge along the side of a wooden ship.
Sinónimos
Examples for "strake"
Examples for "strake"
1But Lionel Flood had a soft strake in him, and India found it out.
2Then, noticing the curved strake, he asked, "How you bend plank?"
3We will strengthen her with additional planks, and get a strake put on above her gunwale.
4Sir Matthew spake no word, but strake his horse with the spurs sorer than he did before.
5Ay, strake and keelson,-asgood a one as though I had got my sap in the Maine forests.
1Then it was over the wale and onto one of the thwarts.
2Her thighs spread the wale of her brown cords wide.
3As the thought passed through her, she saw on Amy's neck a frightful upswollen wale.
4The Bertrams were ay the wale o' the countryside!
5Argoth reached up with his good hand, grasped the top wale, and swung his leg up.
6The dreadman's hand grasped the wale behind him.
7Canst thou see the wale of a stick?
8It's all a wale, a wale o' tears.
9Some of the men wore wide-wale corduroy pants and duck boots and cable-knit sweaters and scarves.
10It's like an unbelievably thin, narrow-wale corduroy.
11The captain'll wale me if I don't.
12Mr. Quintus Slide, when he was really anxious to use his thong earnestly, could generally raise a wale.
13It's a wale o' tears an' we ain't got nuthin' else ter look fer but triberlation an' woe.
14Oh, it's a wale o' tears!
16How you t'ink I get so far down the wale of life, Simon, and nebber see sich a t'ing?